What is it like to live in Watertown?

A turtle finds a rock in the sun along the Charles River.
Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

Kara Baskin - Globe Correspondent

February 14, 2017 10:15 am

Can’t afford Cambridge or Belmont? Consider Watertown. Once overlooked as a cut-through to ritzier burgs, the community is on the upswing thanks to new business and residential construction, with a stream of buyers hoping to get in on the real estate market. Easy access to Boston and the Massachusetts Turnpike make it a convenient choice for commuters, and Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Charles River add bucolic charm.

According to J.D. Donohue, 45, a third-generation Watertown resident, many locals wonder what took everyone so long. “We have a thriving population of upwardly mobile young professionals who want to be close to the city without the high intensity or prices of Somerville or some parts of Cambridge,’’ Donohue said.

Donohue runs Donohue’s, a bar and grill in East Watertown, which he’s expanded from 50 to 240 seats to accommodate the influx. His wife, Amy, is president of the Watertown Education Found
ation, and their four kids attend the public schools.

Donohue said Watertown has changed since his childhood, mainly for the better. “I think there was a long period in town with stagnation. It was very industrialized, and now some properties that sat stagnant have become prime property,’’ he said.

New construction, mainly along Arsenal Street, recalls Watertown’s glory days in the mid-20th century, when Hood Rubber Co. was a major employer and The Arsenal on the Charles was a hub of military activity. Now the area is home to athenahealth. Next door is Branch Line, a swanky rotisserie run by restaurateur Garrett Harker, known for hits like Eastern Standard and Row 34. More developments are in the works, including a Marriott hotel.

That’s not to say Watertown is now glitzy and homogeneous. Mount Auburn Street is lined with family-run businesses like Arax Market and Sevan Bakery; schools remain incredibly diverse, with many Armenian, Irish, Greek, and Italian families. The community is tightknit, Donohue said. He and his wife enjoy eating at The Talk in Watertown Square, a popular hangout. “The owners are local. I like to stick to local places,’’ he said. He shops for fresh produce at Russo’s, and his kids play sports at Victory Field and fish in the river.

Donohue said his grandparents moved to the area for work and that Watertown is now prime real estate.

“The Watertown community has been led in a very good direction. No override issues, taxes are somewreasonable, good development. You have the ‘old’ Watertown and new residents with families. Slowly, it’s turning a new page,’’ he said. “Now people can work and play in the same place. And for a town that’s about four square miles, we pack in a lot of diversity.’’

BY THE NUMBERS

33.1

The percentage of families in the Watertown Public Schools district in which English isn’t the first language, according to the latest state Department of Education data

1775-1776

The years that the Massachusetts Bay Provincial Congress met in the Watertown Meetinghouse and the Executive Council convened at the Edmund Fowle House while the British occupied Boston

1912

Perkins School for the Blind —Globe file/2007

The year the Perkins School for the Blind moved to its current location on the Charles River

1904

The year that Sterling Elliott of Watertown received a patent for the first frictionless garage turntable, according to the Elliott Museum in Stuart, Fla.

PROS & CONS

Pro

Affordability

Watertown is adjacent to Boston, but the real estate is far less expensive than in neighboring communities like Somerville or Cambridge. This might change soon, though: The median sales price jumped nearly 19 percent (to $475,000) from 2005 to 2015 and continues to rise, according to The Warren Group, a real estate-tracking firm.

Con

Traffic

Despite its prime location, there’s no subway service. MBTA buses run regularly, but there’s often gridlock, especially near Watertown Square. New construction might only make things worse.

A mural along Melendy Street —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

Armenian Library and Museum of America —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

The view of the Boston skyline from The Arsenal —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

Watertown Yacht Club —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

The Plumbing Museum —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

An art installation along the Charles River Reservation in Watertown —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff

Lori Toye of Watertown and her son, Garvin, 3, take in the view from a dock along the Charles River. —Joanne Rathe/Globe staff